TREE OF LIFE
Issue #10
July 25th 2004
HAPPILY NATURAL DAY ...by Duron Chavis
As you may or may not know, in August of 2003 the First Annual Happily Natural Day convened in Richmond, Virginia with amazing success. With an attendance of over 300 people, Happily Natural Day addressed the need of Africans in America to take pride in the beauty, the culture, and the heritage inherent in people of color worldwide. Specific focus was placed on natural black hair as a representation of culture, with identification with ethnicity, and most importantly a celebration of our natural selves as a beautiful African people worldwide. In August of 2004, we are celebrating the 2nd Annual Happily Natural Day and we need your help.
The black community since slavery has dealt with the myth of good hair vs. bad hair. Though the hair texture of people of African descent is prone to be curly, the majority of black women often seek a remedy for "bad hair". The "good hair" by definition is straight, long and flowing and easy to get a comb through. "Bad hair" is just the opposite, unmanageable, extremely curly, and "nappy". By definition the hair that our Creator blessed us with at birth should be appreciated and looked upon as beautiful, however in the black community for a large majority of women & men, it is not. Unlike other ethnicities that take pride in their natural hair, many in the black community look at their natural, "nappy hair" as a burden of disgrace, as socially unacceptable. Happily Natural Day as a vehicle was created to uplift the cultural and ethnic pride of Africans worldwide and do away with the idea that the natural characteristics of African culture and ethnicity are socially unacceptable.
There is a legacy that the black community confronts daily due to its unique history in America, the fact that for decades anything having to do with black people was considered the object of ridicule and looked upon in disdain by mainstream European culture. This phenomenon gave birth to an intense inferiority complex in the Black community and can be identified around the world as a characteristic response to white supremacy, a response in which many begin to negate themselves in an attempt to assimilate into European culture. Though it would be an overgeneralization to say that all black women straighten their hair to look like white women; many do so because they simply are not knowledgeable of the easy, cost effective ways in which to take care of their natural hair, it must be noted that for the majority of print & cinematic media especially lifestyle magazines, network television, and the fashion industry the model for beauty is consistently a white woman. These areas of media are referenced everyday by the general public for what is considered socially acceptable in terms of beauty.
How much does the ideal of white supremacy affect us today? How does the acceptance of European standards of beauty as universal reverberate through the African Diaspora? In South Africa, there are a large number of our black brothers & sisters who are so discomforted by their dark skin that they go to extremes to bleach their skins causing illness in the quest to get light, "fair" skin. In adherence to the social mores, status quo, and in conformity to an ideal of beauty characterized by European culture & Western society, African's in America and throughout the world attempt to lighten their skin tone, straighten their hair texture, and through plastic surgery, thin both nose & lips at serious risk to physical health, not to mention the psychological ramifications of not being able to accept the inherent beauty of one's ethnicity.
50 years ago, psychologist Kenneth Clark's work with black children became pertinent evidence in the landmark case Brown vs. Board of Education. The now infamous doll test found that black children were identifying with white dolls more so than black dolls showing that segregation of public schools were detrimental to black children, that it bred an inferiority complex. The findings of that study helped to desegregate the schools, an event we are celebrating this year throughout the United States. In the 1980's the same test was done with the same results, showing that the inferiority complex of black children runs deeper than school. It stands to reason that it was not the segregation of the schools that caused the inferiority complex; it was ideals of white supremacy & the disparity between whites & blacks throughout society caused by white supremacy that bred this syndrome of self-discontent.
The inferiority complex of black children is a societal issue that follows black children into adulthood. By nature what we hate we seek to destroy, disrespect, & mistreat. Today, throughout the Western hemisphere, black youths are destroying, disrespecting, and mistreating each other at alarming rates unparalleled. The irony is that during segregation and during the Civil Rights movement, the phenomenon of black on black crime was not nearly as prevalent as it is today. Characteristic of the Civil Rights movement and resulting Black Power Movement was the unity of the black community around various societal issues and the resurgence in Black Pride exemplified by the slogan "Black is beautiful", natural hair styles i.e. Afros, dashikis, and etc. which was reinforced & permeated through the music, poetry, and culture of the mid 1960's and early 70's. It therefore can be reasoned that when we as black people are unified in our community, aware of and giving recognition to our natural beauty, and reverence to our culture as African people, the community becomes a better place.
The purpose of Happily Natural Day is to reaffirm our pride in our culture & ethnicity as African people worldwide, to give our brothers & sisters empowering, uplifting, and eye-opening information in regard to the importance of black culture, natural health and hair care, positive edutainment, and most importantly to unify the black community as we to celebrate our natural selves. As natural hair styles are resurgent in popularity it is important that we dig beneath the surface, and tap into the minds of the masses and wake up the collective mental potential of our African brethren & sisters, for this purpose a significant portion of Happily Natural Day is dedicated to presentations by renowned scholars in the fields of black consciousness. Last year we proudly presented Dr. Llaila Afrika author of Afrikan Holistic Health & Nutricide, Queen Quet, Chieftess of the Gullah Geechie Sea Island Coalition, Ifa Robinson, Natural Hair care specialist & owner of Indigo Natural Hair Salon, Samuel Taylor, author of Why Do African Americans Call Themselves the N-Word, and Pamela Muhammad-Natural Hair technician, owner of Ancient Techniques Natural Hair Care Center. Also, spoken word poets, musicians, and visual artists from VA, MD, & DC provided socially conscious presentations for our patrons to vibe to and meditate on.
We are hoping your support will make the 2nd Annual Happily Natural Day as memorable as the first. This year Happily Natural Day will be held at Nubian Village Academy, Richmond, Virginia's only African centered charter school, located at 2022 Sledd St. Richmond VA. and will be sponsored by the Prosser-Truth Division #456 of the Universal Negro Improvement Association and African Communities League founded by the Honorable Marcus Garvey in 1918. We continue the work of Garvey by uplifting African people in our communities because it is on the back of our ancestors like Garvey that we live, breathe, and strive for better now & tomorrow. In the turbulent times we live in, we must carry the torch of freedom & spread the knowledge of culture for upliftment of our people of African descent, it is our collective responsibility. In order to further facilitate programs such as Happily Natural Day the proceeds from Happily Natural Day will go to Nubian Village Academy & the Prosser-Truth Division #456 of the UNIA-ACL.
If you would like information on co-sponsoring, vending at, and/ or advertising in our Nappy Journal for Happily Natural Day, I will be happy to accommodate you with the information you require. My phone number is 804-615-8695 and my email is duronchavis@excite.com. I look forward to hearing from you, have a Happily Natural Day!
Who: The Prosser-Truth Div. 456 of The Universal Negro Improvement Association
What: The 2nd Annual Happily Natural Day - A celebration in Black Unity in Recognition of African Heritage Month
Join us for an all-day lecture series with emphasis on black consciousness, natural haircare and wholistic health, spoken word poetry, hip-hop, and neo-soul edutainment and a vendor marketplace
When: Sat. August 21 from 12 noon to 10 pm
Why: Happily Natural Day is a means through which we as African people can raise our collective consciousness & awareness by uniting in the effort to demolish the inferiority complexes that have developed throughout the African diaspora due to our ever-present war with the ideology of white supremacy which permeates Western Society.
Happily Natural Day is needed because we as African people are in need of programming that is overtly designed to do away with the damaging mindsets that have been created by conformity, assimilation and acceptance of and to the tenets of western civilization.
Happily Natural Day is a celebration of black beauty whose foundation is propagating the importance of the raising of black consciousness and African awareness throughout the Diaspora to combat the debilitating effects of the Maafa on African people worldwide.
Happily Natural Day is fundraiser for Nubian Village Academy and the Prosser-Truth Division 456 of the UNIA-ACL.
How: Through the support of businesses, individuals, and organizations who share the vision of Happily Natural Day and see the need for the continual propagation of cultural events of this nature.
THE TREE OF LIFE Vol.1
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